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Cake day: April 20th, 2026

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  • As the Trump administration sought to reassure Americans this week that a hantavirus outbreak posed little risk to the public, Dr. Brian Christine, one of the top public health officials in charge of infectious disease policy, stood before reporters in Nebraska promising a response “grounded in science” and “grounded in transparency.”

    Before he joined the Trump administration last year, Christine was an Alabama-based urologist who specialized in penile implants. He has little public health experience and a history of far-right commentary and promoting conspiracy theories. He’s said the Covid pandemic led to a wider government plot to control people, compared the Biden administration to Nazi Germany and suggested the Covid vaccine had little effect in stopping the pandemic.

    He once hosted a YouTube show called “Erection Connection,” a professional YouTube series on erectile dysfunction for fellow urologists.

    A CNN review of archived podcast episodes, social media posts and radio appearances found that Christine repeatedly framed public health institutions, the federal government and pandemic-era policies as tools used to target conservatives and religious Americans.

    In comments made on a podcast he hosted while running for Alabama state Senate in 2022, Christine questioned the legitimacy of the 2020 election.

    He also advocated for abortion bans without exceptions for rape or incest and suggested there may have been a worldwide effort involving George Soros and figures associated with the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset” to use the pandemic to force small businesses to close.

    Christine repeatedly criticized Covid mandates, arguing that the vaccines neither prevented disease nor transmission, despite evidence the vaccines prevented millions of deaths.

    Andrew Nixon, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Media Relations at the US Department of Health and Human Services, told CNN, “Assistant Secretary for Health Admiral Christine remains focused on executing President Trump and Secretary Kennedy’s agenda to Make America Healthy Again and deliver on President Trump’s Executive Order to protect our children against chemical and surgical mutilation.”

    Christine, a surgeon who went directly from private practice to helping lead the federal government’s public health response, took office last November as assistant secretary for health. Brian Christine, nominee to be assistant Health and Human Services secretary for health, testifies before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee on Capitol Hill July 16, 2025.

    While some of his views were previously reported by The Washington Post during his nomination process, CNN reviewed several additional podcast episodes that appeared to have been deleted from YouTube and Apple Podcasts before his confirmation but remained publicly accessible on Vimeo, where they had been embedded on his former campaign website.

    His senior role at the Department of Health and Human Services places him in charge of offices responsible for family planning, women’s health, infectious disease policy and the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, the uniformed health service of more than 5,000 public health officers who work across the federal government and deploy during public health emergencies. As head of the Public Health Service, Christine also serves as a four-star admiral in charge of the uniformed service.

    Since assuming the post, Christine has led efforts to restrict gender transition care through federal blocks on funding, though the Wall Street Journal reported his private practice office advertised treating transgender people for erectile dysfunction – a claim Christine denied. His personal website also noted his practice offered, “erectile dysfunction in patients who have undergone female-to-male gender reassignment.”

    Christine has been a frequent critic of the Biden administration.

    “There are things that are similar that were going on in Germany that are going on in the United States right now,” Christine said on one episode of “Common Sense” in 2022. “There aren’t concentration camps in the United States, but there’s no question that conservatives feel threatened. There’s no questions that conservatives like myself and others feel like the government is being weaponized against us.”

    A since-deleted Twitter account of Christine’s also showed commentary in line with MAGA activism, including efforts to overturn the 2020 election. In December 2020, Christine retweeted a call from conservative activist Charlie Kirk to urge Republicans to object to the election results on January 6, 2021.

    “BREAKING: Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri will OBJECT to the election results on January 6th This is what courage looks like. This is what it means to FIGHT! RT if every other Republican needs to do the same!” the post read, which was retweeted by Christine.

    Christine’s account also showed repeated engagement with Vernon Jones, the former Georgia Democratic state representative who switched parties to support Donald Trump and later became a supporter of 2020 election fraud claims. ‘Common Sense’ podcast

    Christine’s podcast, called “Common Sense,” focused on abortion, Covid restrictions, transgender rights, religion and what he described as “wokeism” in medicine and government.

    In one episode titled, “When Healthcare is Used Against You,” from October 2022, Christine argued the pandemic had been used by the government to control Americans and influence the outcome of the 2020 election.

    “This is probably the most important thing that’s happened during the pandemic. There is no question that the pandemic was used to influence the outcome of the 2020 elections,” Christine said, later urging listeners to watch “2000 Mules,” the debunked election fraud conspiracy film whose distributor later apologized and removed it from circulation.

    In the same episode, Christine claimed the Covid vaccine “ultimately was proved not to prevent the disease and not to prevent the spread of the disease.”

    “We know that there have been people who have died from that, but we also know that most people who get infected aren’t going to die. Most people who get infected aren’t going to get sick. But the government and the left have used the pandemic to control people,” he said. Criticism of vaccine mandates In this March 16, 2021 file photo, a sign advertises a restaurant opening in Santa Monica, California.

    “We’ve been forced to take the vaccination, how? Well, the government said, if you don’t take the vaccine, you may lose your job. You may lose your income. There were threats in this way. And so a lot of individuals were forced to take the vaccine and to take the boosters. And if someone wanted to take the vaccine, I think that’s fine. But forcing people to take a vaccination is absolutely wrong.”

    He also suggested there may have been a coordinated effort involving “George Soros and the World Economic Forum” to use the pandemic and the so-called Great Reset to benefit multinational corporations while small businesses shut down.

    “Now, was there a worldwide concerted effort to close small businesses and to force them out of business? I don’t know if there was, but it looks mighty suspicious to me,” he added. Abortion views

    In comments on Facebook and in his podcast, Christine also repeatedly defended Alabama’s near-total abortion ban after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.

    In an episode of his podcast titled “Abortion Laws,” Christine said Alabama’s abortion ban should not include exceptions for rape or incest.

    “Now that causes the pro-abortion side of the argument to get really upset that we don’t exclude rape and incest,” Christine said. “But just because the pregnancy occurs through an act of violence, that doesn’t mean the unborn child doesn’t have the right to life and we recognize and we believe that another act of violence and an abortion is an act of violence. We recognize and believe that another act of violence isn’t going to make things right.”

    “So there’s no exclusion for rape and incest. That’s the Alabama law. I think it makes sense,” he added.




  • An anti-doomscrolling feature is now built into Android. (Yes, things have gotten that bad.)

    On Tuesday, Google announced Pause Point, which is designed to keep users from engaging with addictive apps on Android, the mobile operating system that powers Google’s Pixel smartphones, Samsung devices, and others.

    Pause Point works by requiring a 10-second pause after you open any app you’ve labeled for yourself as being a distraction. TikTok, Instagram, X, and even Google’s YouTube could be the kinds of apps labeled as “distracting” by Android device owners worried about the power of time-sucking algorithms to eat away at their day.

    With the addition, Google isn’t only thinking of users’ well-being, of course.

    It’s reacting to increasing regulatory pressure around social media harms and algorithmic dangers. Today, many countries and U.S. states have created laws to restrict or ban minors from using social media, as the impacts of these apps on young people’s mental well-being have become better understood.

    Google can now point to a feature like Pause Point to claim it’s part of the solution, not the problem.

    “Android is more capable than ever, but we also want to give you the tools to disconnect when you need to,” explained Dieter Bohn, previously executive editor at The Verge, now director of product operations for Google’s Platforms & Ecosystems organization, in a press briefing about the Android 17 update.

    “I think that we are all guilty of going into our phone and then opening some app and getting stuck on autopilot, and an hour has gone by,” he said.

    To date, social media app makers, including YouTube, have turned to the idea of app timers as a way to remind you to take a break or stop scrolling. Pause Point flips that idea on its head, as it interrupts the app’s launch — and the dopamine flood that follows — to force you to stop and rethink whether this is what you actually want to do, or is just a habit you’d like to break.

    Google says you could use the time Pause Point enables to do a short breathing exercise or to think about other things you could do instead of scrolling. For instance, the feature can suggest more worthwhile apps, like a favorite fitness app, an audiobook app, the Kindle or Google Play Books app, or others.

    You can also choose to scroll through some favorite photos for ideas — perhaps those reminding you of other engaging activities, like outdoor walks, your pets, or arts and crafts.

    Plus, Pause Point lets you choose to set an app timer before you dive in, which makes the time you spend in-app feel more intentional at the start. This could work better than a default timer, which is always set for the same length of time, even as the circumstances leading you to take a break from scrolling can vary.

    The feature is harder to turn off than traditional app timers, too, many of which can simply be ignored. Instead, Pause Point requires a phone restart to turn it off, Google says, which also makes you think before disabling it.

    Pause Point may not be as fun (or adorable) as the screen-time-focused or self-care apps like Finch or Hank Green’s Focus Friend, but it does have the advantage of being built into Android itself, which could help it gain traction.



  • This disables the QUIC graceful shutdown feature, and thus closes the leak. The mitigation will persist across reboots, but it may be undone by system updates, in which case the steps will need to be repeated.

    Performing this mitigation means that the server-side QUIC socket will remain half-open until it times out, which should generally not negatively affect the Android device or apps running on it. However, only use the command at your own risk if you understand the implications.

    does anyone know what are the implications of the fix proposed?



  • your (you and the other user too) comparisons and depiction of Linux devices and software are the only things in bad faith here.

    even more so since we aren’t talking about ideals and philosophies here, but about google actually attempting to “close” Android.

    so, once more, where do you draw the line?

    personally I’ve already ditched google years ago because it was the right thing to do, now my current phone will be the last android device I’ll use because it’s gonna be the next right thing to do.

    there isn’t much to argue here: keep using android and expect worse than this, or ditch it and boycott that turd of google.











  • One of the most popular Linux distributions is about to get an influx of AI features. As reported by Phoronix, Jon Seager, VP of engineering at Ubuntu developer Canonical, shared a blog post on Monday detailing plans to add AI features to the Linux distro over the next year. As the post states, the AI features “will come in two forms: first as a means of enhancing existing OS functionality with AI models in the background, and latterly in the form of ‘AI native’ features and workflows for those who want them.”

    These features will range from accessibility tools like improved speech-to-text and text-to-speech to agentic AI features for tasks like troubleshooting or personal automation. According to Seager, Canonical will be prioritizing model transparency and local inference when adding these AI features. Behind the scenes, Canonical is also encouraging its engineers to use AI more, but Seager noted that “I will not be measuring people at Canonical by how much they use AI, but rather continue to measure them on how well they deliver.”

    Seager goes on to add that AI features could potentially help new users navigate the “famously fragmented” Linux desktop ecosystem: “If we’re careful about how we employ LLMs in a system context, they could demystify the capabilities of a modern Linux workstation and bring them to a much wider audience.”